| Frank Chamberlain - Hudson River (N.Y. and N.J.) - 1909 - 112 pages
...privileges, for a period of twenty-four years, as follows : To traffic on the coast and in the interior of Africa from the Tropic of Cancer to the Cape of Good Hope ; in America and the West Indies with the power to make engagements, contracts, and alliances with... | |
| Mrs. Schuyler Van Rensselaer - New York (N.Y.) - 1909 - 598 pages
...so, along the American coast from Newfoundland to the Straits of Magellan, along the Atlantic shores of Africa from the Tropic of Cancer to the Cape of Good Hope, in the intermediate islands, and in all places from the Cape westward to the eastern end of New Guinea.... | |
| Allen Johnson - United States - 1918 - 298 pages
...of traffic and navigation within prescribed limits, which included not only the coast and countries of Africa from the Tropic of Cancer to the Cape of Good Hope but also the coasts of America. Within these vague and very extended bounds the Company was empowered... | |
| Maud Wilder Goodwin - History - 1921 - 272 pages
...of traffic and navigation within prescribed limits, which included not only the coast and countries of Africa from the Tropic of Cancer to the Cape of Good Hope but also the coasts of America. Within these vague and very extended bounds the Company was empowered... | |
| United States - 1919 - 300 pages
...of traffic and navigation within prescribed limits, which included not only the coast and countries of Africa from the Tropic of Cancer to the Cape of Good Hope but also the coasts of America. Within these vague and very extended bounds the Company was empowered... | |
| George Edmundson - Netherlands - 1922 - 516 pages
...of America and the West Indies from the south-end of Newfoundland to the Straits of Magellan and to the coasts and lands of Africa from the tropic of Cancer to the Cape of Good Hope. The governing body consisted of nineteen representatives, the Nineteen. The States-General contributed... | |
| National Americana Society - United States - 1923 - 804 pages
...charter, and was invested with the exclusive privilege in traffic and planting colonies on the coast of Africa from the Tropic of Cancer to the Cape of Good Hope ; also on the coast of America from the Straits of Magellan to the utmost north. The States General... | |
| George Patterson Donehoo - Pennsylvania - 1926 - 614 pages
...of these countries shall be permitted to sail to or from the said lands or to traffic, on the coast of Africa, from the tropic of Cancer to the Cape of Good Hope, nor in the countries of America, or the West Indies, beginning at the south end of Terra Nova, by the Straits... | |
| James Sullivan, Edwin Melvin Williams, Edwin P. Conklin, Benedict Fitzpatrick - New York (State) - 1927 - 548 pages
...agricultural requirements. "Brodhead, "History of the State of New York," I, 23. six years, to the coast of Africa, from the Tropic of Cancer to the Cape of Good Hope, and to America, from the Straits of Magellan to Terra Nova, the islands thereabout included." Before... | |
| Frederic Ellsworth Kip - 1928 - 500 pages
...latitude; and the charter of the Dutch West India Company gave them the exclusive trade of the coast of Africa, from the Tropic of Cancer to the Cape of Good Hope, and of the coast of America from the Straits of Magellan to the extreme north. A report on the condition... | |
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